Help:Minor edit

In all editors, you can mark an edit as minor by checking the minor edit box in the edit summary field. Shown here is the way it looks in source and the classic editor.

It's a good idea to check the minor edit box whenever you make an edit that doesn't affect the overall meaning of a page.

Edits which correct typos, add formatting, or simply rearrange text don't usually require community review. By marking them as minor, you allow your fellow editors to suppress them in the page history and recent changes list. This allows others to focus their attention on more substantial edits.

Knowing when to call an edit "minor", and marking your edits correctly, can help avoid conflict with your fellow editors. Almost every community on Fandom will appreciate you labelling a spot of spellchecking as "minor" — and frown if you do the same when you add five new paragraphs.

Things to remember

Any change to the source text (wikitext), even if it does not affect the presentation of the page in HTML, will still be treated as a change according to the database. So if you add a space or a line break, you'll generate an entry in the page history. Such cases are excellent examples of minor edits.

Marking a major change as a minor one is considered poor etiquette, especially if the change involves the deletion of some text. Avoid marking an edit "minor" if it would be reasonable for another editor to consider your edit "major".

If your preferences allow you to see minor edits, they'll appear in both of these lists with a bolded "m" character (m) next to them.

Reverting a page is not likely to be considered minor under most circumstances. When the status of a page is disputed, and particularly if an edit war is brewing, then it is better not to mark any edit as minor. Reverting blatant vandalism is an exception to this rule.

Who can mark an edit as minor?

An administrator or a user with rollback rights can semi-automatically revert the edits of the last editor of a page; all such "rollback" revisions are marked as minor by the software. This is because the cumulative effect of the edits and the rollback is zero changes. The intended use of the rollback feature is for cases of vandalism, where the act of reverting any vandalism should be considered minor (and can be ignored in the recent changes list).